Do you consider yourself to be cosmopolitan, a citizen of the world, above and beyond being a citizen of anywhere else?

This is, in fact, the opposite of cosmopolitan as imagined by Diogenes in the fourth century BC when he first claimed to be a kosmopolites.

As Anthony Appiah explains, 'The cosmopolitan task, in fact, is to be able to focus on both far and near. Cosmopolitanism is an expansive act of the moral imagination. It sees human beings as shaping their lives within nesting memberships: a family, a neighbourhood, a plurality of overlapping identity groups spiralling out to encompass all humanity. It asks us to be many things because we are many things'.

This means that you are a citizen of your street, your suburb, your state and your country and then the world. We should keep our 'eyes on matters near and far, promoting political systems that also work for localists. The Anywheres must extend their concern to the Somewheres'.